:>» :> 



> > > 



OfeZSS 



> > »> 

j» 

>>; 
)» 

> > 

> < 
:> > 
"> ) 

- ) > 



3^ I> 

> 3) 3 



5S ^ 



J * f 



3393 



1^ 



& 3 



> -o \r> 






LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. J 

QNITED BTATE8 OP AMERICA. £ 



5> 



5^3 



>> » ^ 



:> » 



> > 



o 

* > • .* 

> > 

> 3 



> i 

i i 

> > 

>3 
> j 

3 > 



> .^ • 

> 3 

> 3 

> > 

> > 

> > 



>3 -«>i> 



> > O 



> > » 



» > 

> »> 



» >> 

>> 









> 



* X3 > *? 
:>:~arr 



3> 3> 



»3o:2»--3Z> 3 3> ~z> 33 "_ 

3T>23 ,":• 3> 2>2> ^> 33 

>J3>3 ^ .* 33 33 O 33> 

> 53 33 33 3^ ^3 33 

»3> .33 > \33 3>3> 7^> 33_. 

85?,>>3> 33 3^~-g> 33 .33 >->- 

*J2» ^ 33 3 HS 33 3> o 
» 73333 ,-3> 3>^> 73 3~ 

®^a qS^ SB 33 3 S" 

3SJ®£» 733 3- rg> 3>% ^3 75 

' ~«s> >7> >3> 77v 3 • ■ - 3> -^> -3 3 v> 

3 ^33-3 33 3 t> 375 

^ > :3> 3 3 3 3 • = 



^ ^ > 73>1>X> 3>> 

3> 3 3. ^s*. ^ ^w; 



IJ 33 

► ->' x> 

> 3 
3^ 73 

3^> 2> 



► > 3> 

3> 3 3 3 3, 33 

3> 3 3 3 3 >j 

» •".> 3> 3 3 3 '> 

► 3 3 >■ 3 3 7: 

I>3p»3X> 3>.Q> > S> 

jg>>2>>3». 330> 3b 2? 

3 3'-2> 3» 7> ■* 3 

1|>3332S> 3»'3 



3>30> ^ 
3> 25 3 3~ 

3 733 7> t?3> 

3. 3 ^^r> 

3 i 3 3 1>313> 

3) 33 ~3 5)^2>' 

:> T> "3> »">22*> 

>^ _iv ^> >»3> 

3> 



3 ::oT>> 7>3> i 

^>^>I3& ^>3> = 

3^> 7>3> ._ 

.3 37> ~I^1£> ,Z> 

3 3"35 ^>1£> L 



3>5> ^>3> ^_ 



33> 7>> 1 i> 

3 »T> J 
3^I> Z^ 
_3^X» Z 
"3.>1> ■»>> 
3^t> Z»^~ 
"^3> 
)5 
3> 
33 



» 3 - 
5 S3 = 



35333> -3^ ^^J 






3 ^ J> • 
>> 3> >- 

3> 3§t> 3 3 Z> 



^ 3 y 3 

3> 3 3~3 



3 >3 

3 ^3> 



>3 ..Z> 

3 3 13- 

33 «1 



Ji3 > 



>3 3^^^* 



^3>!>j»5>.. 3 3 ~ 

,3i ?»>$> /3> -> -^> 

33>3 3 3 Z> 
3j>i>-y> 3 Z>' J= 3>. 

3^» ^>jp>-3- 

3/3>>2> 3 . -r> -=>1 



> 3> 3333^ -.3 v>: 

3> 3>g33» '. .^ 3^ 
vT> 33>3».3 33J^33> 

3gS J3^» v ^^^^> 
>^3> 333^>3-:?^ 7 33> 

33> 3 3 33>~3>^ 3^>. 
,?3> D333' -• Ofc-^^t^ 



3 3 \_3> -■ C3> 3V«3> 
3> 3> 3 3K»-^:0»_^^>^^ 

^3 "1>Z> ^»» 3^^>^3> 

3 _3> ^> 3g» '5^ ^ ■&=£ 

1> 3». _i3> :3BS>^-'S^» 3>.»>- 



^ 3> D^>3 3 3> 



^ '3 35> 
^5 3^ 

3 3T^ 
3 > 

> >^ 

> >y 

> Bi 

> °3y 

?^3?> 



^3331 



^> M & "3 > "^ 

3^i> 2Z> 3I3 

^3> §5*5 



>>J» 2> 






1 3> 3»^ ^ 

1 )' 



3 W> _Z>^ I 

3 3 ; 

3 3 

3 3 

3 3 7 

3 3 : 

r> 3 
3 3; 
3 > ~ 
3 3^>53> 

3 3 3> : 3j 
3 > T> 3' 



3gS>33>T3>^3i 
>3>3> 3>37» 
33f>3> j3>3», 
3> > 3> ^»3^ 
3S> 3 .S:3> :3> 



^^3>: 

"■" 3 -> 



' 33 
. ::3 



3 _ 



3 >i 
3 3 1 

3 >Z>33B> 
3 3Z>333 ".J. 
3>32l> 333 3 
3 3 >3S> " 
3 3T3>333 

3:3i3> 3^3.: ' : 

•3,>3> 3-3 v 



w 



SERMON 



u 



DELIVERED IN THE 



UNITED STATES NAVAL ACADEMY, 



ON THE DAY OF THE FUNEKAL OF THE LATE PRESIDENT. 



ABRAHAM LINCOLN, 



M.ASON NOBLE, 



CHAPLAIN IT. S. N. 



NEWPORT: 
GEORGE T . n A M M N D , PRINTER. 

% '"" A 

11— „ : _ : ::Lji ii! 



SERMON 



DELIVERED IN THE 



UNITED STATES NAVAL ACADEMY, 



ON THE DAY OF THE FUNERAL OF THE LATE PRESIDENT, 



ABRAHAM LINCOLN, 



BY 



MASON NOBLE 



CHAPLAIN U. S. N. 



NEWPORT : 

GEORGE T. HAMMOND, PRINTER 

1866. 



CORRESPONDENCE, 



U. S. Naval Academy, ~) 

JYewpnt, R. I. Jpril 20, 1865. £ 

Bear Sir : — Having listened with deep interest to your Sermon of yesterday s 
and desiring that its sentiments may be more widely known, we respectfully re- 
quest a copy for publication. 

The events which called us together were of the most solemn character, and 
have made a most serious impression. The calamity which has befallen the na- 
tion has spread over our land a fearful gloom not soon to be dispelled. 

Your remarks yesterday were admirably calculated to shew the feeling which 
animates the entire American people, and while feelingly observant of the noble 
character, true patriotism and spotless integrity, of our late chief magistrate, 
they were fitted to remind us of the existence of our Creator from whence Com- 
eth comfort in the hour of affliction. Hoping for a favorable reply, we remain 
Very respectfully, 
Rev. Mason Noble. F. M. Hendrix, R. B. Bradford, 

Committee from the 1st Class. 
R. Waterman, M. S. Day, 

Committee from the 2d Class, 
W. H. Frailey, J. P. Newell. 
Committee from the 3<£ Class. 



U. S. Naval Academy, } 
April 20, 18(55. > 
Gentlemen : — I have received your very kind note of this date requesting a 
copy for publication of my sermon delivered before you yesterday. 

I most cheerfully comply with your request, and will with pleasure furnish 
you a copy for the press. 
I remain, gentlemen, with great regard faithfully yours, 

MASON NOBLE. 
Messrs. F. M. Hendrix, ") 
R. B. Bradford, | 
R. Waterman, y Committee. 
W. H. Frailey, 
J. P. Newell, J 



SERMON. 



'■' For promotion cometh neither from the East nor from the West, nor from 
£he South. But God is the Judge. He putteth down one and setteth up anoth- 
er."— Psalm 75 :— 6— 7. 

We are assembled here to-day at the summons of the 
Government. We gather with a weeping Nation around 
the body of our late beloved and venerable Chief Magis- 
trate, ABRAHAM LINCOLN ! Though the capitol is 
so many hundred miles away, yet we can as it were, hear 
the sobs of grief which cannot be suppressed in the im- 
mediate presence of that loved form, and can mingle 
our tears with those of the thousands who crowd the 
great procession that is winding its way through the still 
and gloomy streets of our National metropolis. Yes ! 
The dread reality is as vivid to us as to them. None of 
us can escape from its presence. It surrounds us every 
moment. It is with us in our busiest hours. It haunts 
our very dreams ; and when we awake to consciousness 
we hope sometimes that it may be only a dream. But 
the sad truth soon forces itself again upon us. For it 
has covered our homes with the symbols of mourning. 
It has closed up in darkness and comparative silence our 
shops and stores and places of public resort. It has filled 



6 SERMON BEFORE 

our streets with anxious and gloomy faces, and our friends 
as they meet us press our hands in speechless sorrow and 
turn away to weep alone. 

But independent of all these external signs of grief, 
there is a sense of the terrible calamity in the depth of 
our hearts which no words can express and no symbols 
illustrate. I would not intrude upon the sacredness of 
your sorrow ; and I feel that my own is too deep and 
solemn to be spoken of to any one but God. To Him 
we may speak ; and this is the meaning of this hour of 
worship. The temples of the land are all thrown wide 
open at this hour, and the Nation is prostrate before the 
throne of the God of our Fathers. The American peo- 
ple have come with stricken hearts into His presence ; 
and it is some alleviation to our own anguish to know 
that while we are here singing our solemn dirges, depre- 
cating His wrath and .supplicating His mercies, our broth- 
ers in all the loyal States have turned away from their 
usual employments, and are looking up sadly and hope- 
fully to our common Father in Heaven. 

We all feel probably as we have never felt before the 
awful sovereignty of God. We sec clearly that if " the 
earth and the inhabitants thereof arc not dissolved," it is 
because " He bears up the pillars thereof." It is no 
theological dogma with us to-day but a living faoi thai 
tl promotion cometh neither from the Bast, nor from the 
West, nor from tin; South. Bui God is the Judge. Uo 

th down one ami setteth up another." A week 
to-day how firmly was Abraham Lincoln seated in the 
eery centre of earthly power and glory ; the object of 

the Nation's warmest love ; tin- hope and joy of all the 

loyal millions of the land. He seemed appointed of God 



THE NAVAL ACADEMY. / 

to bear up the pillars of the Government, and the Nation 
leaned in full confidence upon his strong arm and manly 
heart. In a moment the hand of an assassin is permit- 
ted to overwhelm him, and another stands in his place, 
clothed in his power and summoned to his responsibilities. 
Yes ! the hand of man has done it in wrath and hate, 
but God has permitted it to be done, and the solemn 
voice which speaks out of Heaven to all of us as we turn 
our weeping eyes toward his gracious and yet awful 
throne, is " Be still and know that I am God. I will be 
exalted among the wicked. I will be exalted in the ' 
land." 

The Divine supremacy is a fact ; and that fact made 
glorious and attractive by all the perfections of Him who 
reigns over the boundless universe, is and should be the 
chief source of consolation in the sorrows that to-day 
overwhelm us. Especially may we remember as we see 
the head of our National Government so suddenly laid 
low in death, that 

1. Government itself is ordained of God. 

The State is not so much an institution of man as it is 
an ordinance of God. As it is not a question with any 
one of us whether we should be born at all, so we are 
not permitted to say whether we will be subject to the 
power of an organized State. We are introduced into 
its presence at the moment of our birth. It encompasses 
us on every side with its laws, its high behests, its pro- 
tection, its unceasing inspection, its obligations and its 
penalties. 

The form of the Government, the degree of power 
which it may weild, and the particular mode of its ad- 
ministration, may all be made dependent on the will of 



8 SERMON BEFORE 

man. But the fact of the State is independent of men, 
and is ordained of God as directly as the roll of the plan- 
ets, or the laws of the light, or the balancings of the 
clouds or the changes of the seasons. 

If then, «' the wicked bend their bow, and make ready 
their arrow upon the string that they may privily shoot 
at the upright in heart," the foundations are not des- 
troyed, nor one pillar of our glorious civil temple torn 
from its base. The President may die. But " Jehovah 
is in His holy temple. Jehovah's throne is in Heaven. 
How say ye to my soul ? Flee as a bird to your moun- 
tain ! In Jehovah put I my trust ! The powers that 
be are ordained of God. Jehovah is then my Rock, and 
my Fortress, and my Deliverer ; my God, my strength 
in whom I will trust." 

But there is another truth which we may well remem- 
ber in this day of our national bereavement, viz : 

2. God has ordained that civil Governments should 
grow out of and represent the general character of the 
governed. 

Our God is a great King who putteth down one and 
setteth up another. As Governor among the Nations He 
is governed by certain great principles of justice and 
right as well as of Divine beneficence. The Bible teach- 
es US that lie so orders and controls all events that the 
heart of the Nation, or its great moral principles, should 
be fully represented in the Statt 1 which is ordained and 
established. 

It may be brae in one sense that a ruler may give 
oharacter to the Nation which he governs. But there is 
a higher and grander truth than this. Thai omniscient 
eye which penetrates beneath the mere surface of human 



THE NAVAL ACADEMY. 9 

society, sees thoughts, feelings, principles, working there 
in the depths of men's souls, and actually forming by 
immutable moral laws the very despot and tyrant who in 
his time comes up and treads the people down in the 
dust, or that beneficent and glorious Sovereign who will 
acknowledge and protect their rights, and raise them to 
the sublime heights of national honor and happiness. 

The despotism of King Saul, rising as it did out of a 
Divine democracy, was ordained of God ; and yet it rep- 
resented the false views and proud ambition of a people 
already corrupted from their primitive simplicity, and to 
whom despotism was a necessity as well as a just pun- 
ishment. The various modifications of the State under 
his successors, David and Solomon and Rehoboam, were 
immediately connected with the character of the people 
and represented the changes in their views and feelings 
and conduct. Their rulers came forth by the decree of 
the most High, and yet they grew out of the soil of the 
Nation and faithfully represented the Nation in its real 
character and deserts. 

And so it has ever been in the history of States. The 
world has never been forsaken by its Maker, or left to be 
the sport of chance, nor its Governments permitted to 
rise out of chaos with no directing hand or intelligent 
forming power. God has ever been in the midst of 
States, illustrating and vindicating great principles of 
righteousness and truth as well as mercy. No one, in- 
deed, can read history intelligently or profitably, unless 
he remembers that God is superintending and controlling 
all, and in the Governments which He ordains, is never 
departing one iota from the principle of representing the 
character of the people in the privileges and immunities 



10 SEHMON BEFORE 

which they enjoy, or in the oppressions and sorrows which 
they endure. 

The State may be a bald and heartless despotism ; or 
a mixture of arbitrary power and wild freedom ; or a 
great and wise monarchy more jealous of the rights of 
all than the most unrestricted democracy, or a free and 
noble Republic where man stands up in his truest dignity 
and liberty is most strongly guarded by constitutional 
law. But whatever they arc, they are all not so much 
man's invention as God's ordinance, and that not by ar- 
bitrary appointment, but according to eternal and immu- 
table principles of right. States, as well as individuals, 
are ever reaping what they have sown, eating of the fruit 
of their own way, and filled with their own services. 

In relation to our own Republic, we rejoice to know 
and acknowledge that in its form and substance it is one 
of the most precious gifts that God has ever conferred 
upon any people. But we are certain that in this He 
has not departed one hair's breadth from those great 
principles which have ever been illustrated in the history 
of Nations. We say, and we say truly, that it was 
Washington and that noble band of self-sacrificing men 
who surrounded him, who secured to us our political in- 
stitutions. We can, indeed, follow them step by step, 
through many anxious and weary years, guiding us by 
their wise counsels, leading on our discouraged and yet 
patient army of brave and Buffering heroes, and finally 
establishing our institutions on a, solid basis of enduring 

prosperity and glory. But it is true, also, that such men 
as these could have been found nowhere else id the world. 
Such tall, majestic tiers, could have grown in no other 
soil. If the soul of Washington had been brought into 



THE NAVAL ACADEMY. 11 

existence in Mexico, or old Spain, or France, or even 
England itself, his intellectual and moral character would 
have been very different from what it became in this land. 
That remarkable man— so pure, so true, so patient, so 
wise, so exalted in his views, of such gentle dignity 
among men and so reverent before God, turning with in- 
stinctive aversion from oppression in every form, and lov- 
ing liberty with a calm and strong, if not a passionate, 
devotion, forgetting to use his power for his own exalta- 
tion and laying everything he possessed at the feet of 
the Nation, prizing the people as the greatest treasure of 
a State, and assured that by their own intelligence and 
virtue they might secure all the blessings of good Gov- 
ernment — such a man, we say, could have been formed 
in no other Nation except by a miracle. When these 
sublime virtues had been concentrated in his person he 
was then raised up on the heights of power by that God 
who had determined to represent in him that band of 
men who were once gathered on the deck of the May- 
flower, and whose descendants, through Washington and 
his co-workers, might give character to the counsels and 
the deeds that should secure our free institutions and our 
immortal Republic. 

There were, as we all know, defects in their charac- 
ter ; and those defects appear in the State which they 
organized. The stream will never rise above the foun- 
tain ; and political institutions will show the plague-spot 
on the hands of those who form and administer them. 

Our Republic consists practically, not simply of the 
constitution, but of the administration of the Govern- 
ment. It is a solemn fact which we would this day rec- 
ognize, that as our Administrations have followed each 



12 SERMON BEFORE 

other in quick succession for nearly a century, they have 
represented the real character of the people. The enact- 
ments of law and the policy and measures of Govern- 
ment, have been such as the people on the whole de- 
manded. Our public dealing with great moral questions, 
such as the punishment of crime, the observance of the 
Sabbath, the treatment of the Aboriginal races of this 
continent, the manner of regarding the Nesro in his 
bondage, and our habit of considering the claims of jus- 
tice and of the will of God as supreme over all, our deal- 
ing, I say ; with these questions in our public counsels, 
has been such as the people demanded, and to them they 
have consequently given the sanction of their deliberate 
approbation. 

But why do I dwell on such a topic in the midst of 
the desolations and sorrows of this day of our National 
bereavement and lamentation? It is that I may set still 
more distinctly before you, young gentlemen, the great 
fact, that 

3. Our late President was a true and conscious Repre- 
sentative of the heart of the American people. 

His character as a statesman was formed by the insti- 
tutions and prevailing public sentiment of the Nation. 

Born in the South, and trained there for a time, he 
was familiar with their domestic institutions. He knew 
thoroughly the condition of the slave, and the effects of 
slavery on those who hold them in bondage. He saw 
the great, the indescribable evils of the whole system ; 
and was most deeply impressed with the diiliculty of re- 
moving them. 

At the same time, his long residence in the live States 
had convinced him o{' the infinite superiority of free 



THE NAVAL ACADEMY. 13 

labor, and he felt that these two systems could not co- 
exist permanently under the same Government. And 
yet, in common with the vast majority of the American 
people, he hoped that by mutual forbearance for a time 
and the honest carrying out of the principles of the 
Fathers of the Republic freedom would ultimately triumph 
without war, and that the Nation would remain one and 
indivisable. 

WJien therefore the Slave Power struck at the life of 
the Nation and the Providence of God elevated him to 
the chief Magistracy and committed to his hands the af- 
fairs of the Republic in the bloody struggle to which it 
was summoned his heart beat responsive to the heart of 
the people. 

In the tender and earnest appeal of his first Inaugural 
Address and his solemn determination to restore every 
fortress and every inch of territory to the control of the 
Government, in his reluctant and yet courageous summons 
to arms when the flag of Fort Sampter was dishonored 
by a traitorous and arrogant foe, in his subsequent proc- 
lamations, and faithful, firm, sagacious and glorious acts 
of administration in which he so carefully and conscien- 
tiously guarded his steps he knew that he was not leading 
the people or exciting and goading on a hesitating Nation. 
He felt rather that he was their servant, and that to him 
as President the voice of the people was most truly the 
voice of God. Hence he himself said that he had not 
controlled events but was controlled by them. The war 
was not for a moment his war or the war of his admin- 
istration, or the war of the Republican party. It was 
the people's war for the life of the Nation. Their wis- 
dom, their valor, their zeal, their sacrifices, their sor- 



. 



14 SERMON BEFORE 

rows, their hopes, their living, fiery, unquenchable patri- 
otism, their immutable and ever intensifying purpose to 
save the Nation, were ever concentrating their power 
upon him. Under the pressure of such an influence he 
went forth to his great work, and by such inspiration he 
accomplished, under God, his glorious success. 

Even in his leniency from the beginning towards those 
in insurrection, in his reluctance to believe in the savage 
barbarity of their leaders, in his inability to appreciate 
the cruelty which long habits of oppressing a servile race 
had made possible if not natural to them, in a deep com- 
passion for the insane delusions which had swept like a 
tornado over the minds of the masses, and in the benev- 
olent hope that pardon offered to all would result in uni- 
versal submission and a restored Union, and in an entire 
freedom from revenge and hate, he truly represented the 
great heart of the American people. 

And finally, when after years of conflict the last ter- 
rific campaign came, it was through him that the voice 
of an united and determined people proclaimed as their 
ultimatum peace through victory ! And when he said 
" war ! and war only to the bitter end of rebellion !" he 
rose only to the height of sublime determination on which 
the Nation itself finally stood. 

And when victory hung out her glorious banners on 
every side, when stronghold after stronghold fell before 
the lesibtless might of the military power, when the cap- 
itol of the pretended confederacy was hurledfrom its bad 
eminence and the proud army of their commander-in- 
chief was broken and routed and captured, and sent 
without arm- to their ruined homes, when rebellion was 
everywhere prostrated> and " mene, menu, tekel, uphar- 



THE NAVAL ACADEMY. 15 

sin," was written by the finger of God Himself on the 
palace wall of the modern Babylon, then what were the 
emotions of the great soul of our chief ? Gentleness, 
kindness, sympathy for the suffering, forgiveness, union, 
peace ! Not one word of reproach, not a single taunt, not 
a whisper of revenge, not a desire for one degree of unne- 
cessary sorrow. And in all that too I think he represented 
the forgiving heart of a great and magnanimous Nation. 

But in this, both he and the people were in danger of 
the most grave error in judgment, and of thus falsely in- 
terpreting the providence of God. With few exceptions 
we seemed in the joy of victory and the anticipations of 
peace, to be blind to the malignant and deadly spirit of 
the rebellion, while we failed to recognize the dread 
claims of justice in the settlement of the Nation on foun- 
dations that could endure forever. 

But at this point God interposes His awful hand. By 
a providence as mysterious in some of its aspects as it 
was terrific and overwhelming, He permits the insane 
spirit of the rebellion to reveal itself to the Nation and 
to the world. Its satanic form suddenly presents itself in 
the bloody assassin of the chief magistrate himself. As 
he falls in death the scales instantly fall from the eyes of 
the Nation, and Justice, pure as white robed mercy, is 
seen descending out of Heaven, and though her garments 
are red as blood, yet the people recognize her as the 
Messenger of God and the Deliverer of the Land. The 
cry, the shout, the fearful shout of the people is, Just- 
ice ! Justice ! Justice ! And as they cry the man steps 
forth. Andrew Johnson is now the Representative op 
the American People. God's appointed Agent to do 
His work. 



1G SERMON BEFORE THE NAVAL ACADEMY. 

I tremble as I see him sit down in that high and holy 
place. My prayer is that his hand may remain firm 
while his heart is true. My hope is— a Nation estab- 
lished BY MERCY AND TRUTH MEETING TOGETHER, AND RIGHT- 
EOUSNESS AND PEACE KISSING EACH OTHER. Amen. 









i y > - 



5 » 3> L> 0~T~ 



3 ^> ">:>> 









> z> > : 
- 



> ^ 






* > > 






o :>- 

O ST 



■ - - 
^ - 



£> 7> 



2fc ■ 



^"^~S 






^ ^. ^ -k 












^» 






» 
^ > 

» 



> 



>• ^5 






a 



3> 3? 



>S> J>3 2_-» j ^»- _>_3 3_^ 

3 3373 3 3 33 33 
3 3 >3> >-> 3 " 
3 3333 3 3 7. 
>>x> 33:3-^33 = 

5>i£> 3 3>3~~>3 3 -. 



33 73337 

3J33 333,. 
3 3 77> 33 
3 3 3 337 



33 333: 

3?> Z> 3 > 

3 3, 33 37^ 

33 3 3 33 
33 33 33 
.■> ^ 3 33 
33333^ 

>i2. 3 3 3 ^ 

3 3 3 3 

s >-> 3373 



_J» 3 J 

3 33 

3 33 
3> 

• 3 3~ 

*>. 3 33 
3 3 33 
3 3 33 

> 3 3 3 



, o 3 3 > ._ 

■• 3 3 3 > 7 

-■'' ^ 73 3 > . 

; >^3'3 3 )j; 
>> 3~33» 3 >_ 

~>30 33E>3 J 



> ■• >3 3 > 
33;>335> 3 2> 
3»3333 -'3 ^ ■ 
:> >>>X> >3 s> 

L>>'^ ~> >3 . 



> '^3 33 3 

E>3:Q> 3>.";T 

S>'>3 3 7 
K>> :3> 3 3 ■» _J> 
»332» 3 3 3 
»>3 3^ 

3* > 3 3 __ 

DDR^> 3 73> 
3*»a£» 3 Z^ 
3>*^2* 3 V 
73» 73 73 r 

3^3 3 y 

3>:7> 3 



-33 3 3 3 33Z 

3 :^Z> 3 
3 3 3 SS3 3 3 
^ 3 3 3 33 3 3> 

£3 3 3 3 33 3?2> 



33~3»^:3> 



3rv75> 
33 3 

3DnfS> 



52> 3 "3 
73>> 3 3 



3 3 -3 3 33 3 3 ~3> 73> 



S3 3 73 3 03 3 3 33 ^> 
-■3 3 >3 3 3 3 3 T» 3>; 
3 3 V3 3 3 3 3 3K> 3 



3i»D>'Z 

3>> 3 
3 o z> 
•T>^> Z> 
> > 3 
i > ^ -> 
3> ^ Z> 
^> 3 3 3 
^3 3» » 3 
Z> ' > $> ~2> 
' ~3> 3»3> 3 
3> 3»>3 
> 3> 3-3 > 
►' Z> ^»1> 3> 
"^' :>>3 

>>3 

>^3 
33^3 

g> ■ 3 >T> 



3 3 



3 > 3 3> 3£T> r 3 1 3» ^3> Z 
\3 )3 ^Z> Z> ^3 Z> 

3 aO Z> ?f>3 3> E> Z> 3 

3 f€>3 "3\ 

3>3Z> ^: 

■ 3> -3 3> JS»7: 
3 3>3> 3>_ 
3 3"T>- S&r 
> 33> 3 
3* 3 >3 73>Z> 3> 3: 



>3> Z>^Z> > > 

X> I3>Z> 3 3 
>I3 3»Z> 3X3 



3 3 S 
3 3 J 

3> 313 3»Z> 333 : 

3 33^ 35>~: 

2» •_: 

• "33 ~. 

3^^ "" 

» 3 33 3 3 Z> 3 0_3> 

3> 3 33 3 3 ;Z> SET> 

►3 33> 3 > 3> >-3 3> 

3>3 33 33 33D3 

- > 33> s 3 3 3> 3 3Z> 

y33> 3 3 3>3 3r 

3 3 3 33> 3 32 

i> 33 3> 3 3Z> 



3> ' "S> J3 33 33 » 

33 3> 333 33> 

3s> 3» i333> 3> ": 

3> 3 7333 3> 

3» 3> J> 3>3 3I> ? 

3>3> r>31> 33»^ 

331> ->7>^. 3> 

3^3 3> 3t> "3 : 

3>3 7333 33 
3>3> Z> 3»3> 33 
33>^* 73 3->3 
3?3 7> 3X>Z> 3> 
• .-3>3 37>3SZ> ^ 
3/3 7> 3)73 3 
?>" 3 7> 3»7> 



-3 3 
> 3 
3 3 

3 3 



3 33 
3> 3 
3> 33 



73 ^ » 
7>>53> 3 3 
->^S3> 3 3 
73 73 373 
3 3 TV 3^ 

3^7> 3 3 

333 3 3 
333 3 3 

3>3 3Z> 

^> ' > 3> _3> 
3 3» 3-3 

3 >3 3 73 

3>3 3^, 
3>73 73 3 

3>?3 73 :^> 

3> 3 Z3 73 
7> 3 773 3 

3 > 3 3> ^ 



5>»j 

3? q 
333 

3 3 

3 3 
3 3 

3 5- 
3 3: 

3 3 
3 3 
3 3 
3?5 
33 



3C5>^ 

>3 ^ 
3> > 77 

3> ; 3> z: 

3>3T 
3' 3^ 

■> >7> 

1 3 3 7> 
> 373 



3 3r>'33> 
3V3 3T 

>^> 3 . 

~>S3 3 



3 333 3 3: 
3 33 3 3 
3 3^3 3 gr 
3^33 3 3^ 
73 333 3*3 
3333T33 5 
^>73 33 

^73 ^^>~ 

3 /t> r 37r> f = r - 
>33? 

^> 7> ZS> 
3-1-3 :^>77 
Z>3rr> 3> 

73 ^3 72>Z 
3>3 3 
7333 Z 

:33 73.3 313 3. > 
3 3 3 Z> -3 3 > 



33 _ 
3)7 

3>: 

333 

m% 

33 73 
33 
33 7 



3 3 72> 



-> V3D- 

3 3 

3 3 



33 7> 
333 3> 

^■3 z: 



733 sm- 3 ^ 

3> 3 ■■-> 73 ^ 
»^ 3 :5T s. 

33 3 T" 

733 
7D 

>77X> 
^.7^> . 
P 7X> 
•2> 73> 3,>Z> 37 

c ^ >>73 m 



3 3 3 

3 3-""" 

3 3 77^. 

3 3 3 

3^3 3 
3)3 3 > r 
333 3 > ; 
>\3 "3 37 

3 ) >3 = 

> ^^ 

^> 3 3 J>3 
O 3^3 53 

> > — » > 3 



_3 3 Z» >2 
3>3 3 3 



33 3 3 3) 

'3£> 3 33V 

3>3-3 3^^3' " 

3 55 3>>3 
33 -3 >>■ 7 

3 ■> 3> > 
.7S>33» > 7 

3 :y>v^. 

3 > » 






ifflsr 






UBRARY OF CONGRESS 



012 045 202 2 « 



